Treat Syria aid as urgently as chemical weapons: MSF

Medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) called Tuesday on Syria's warring groups and the international community to make aiding needy civilians as urgent a priority as dealing with chemical weapons.

"Influential countries gathered around a table, thrashed out an agreement on chemical weapons and put it into practice. They have shown it can be done, so where are the efforts to repeat this success with the burning question of access for humanitarian aid?" said MSF General Director Christopher Stokes in a statement.

The appeal from MSF came four days after the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) won the Nobel Peace Prize for its work to rid the world of the devastating weapons.

The OPCW currently has teams on the ground in Syria working to dismantle a large chemical arsenal thanks to a UN Security Council resolution that staved off threatened US military strikes and was brokered through exhaustive diplomatic wrangling.

MSF called for humanitarian aid to be treated as an equally pressing priority.

It said many parts of Syria are under seige and sealed off from aid workers, either because access is blocked by President Bashar al-Assad's regime or because of the intensity of fighting.

It pointed to the Damascus suburbs of East and West Ghouta, which OPCW inspectors have visited but where MSF said medics report "desperate" drug shortages and cases of malnutrition due to lack of food.

"Syrian people are now presented with the absurd situation of chemical weapons inspectors freely driving through areas in desperate need, while the ambulances, food and drug supplies organised by humanitarian organisations are blocked," said Stokes.

Five million Syrians have fled their homes during the two-and-a-half-year-old conflict.

The United Nations says the Syrian government has reduced the number of visas for humanitarian groups and placed strict conditions on distributing aid to opposition-controlled zones.

The kidnapping of seven International Committee of the Red Cross and Red Crescent aid workers in northern Syria at the weekend -- four of whom were freed Monday -- has also shone a spotlight on the dangerous conditions facing humanitarian groups.